Shawn Vermette

This week we break in a new panelist while prognosticating on some industry-wide events in 2011.

Current score

Gerry Pagan: 0

Andrew Passafiume: +295

Graham Russell: +299

Eric Schabel: +60

Shawn Vermette: +205

 

Results

Nintendo to reveal fate of Vitality Sensor by end of 2010

Well, 2010 came and went without any word from Nintendo regarding the Vitality Sensor. This doesn’t mean it is dead, but considering the lack of any official mention since E3 2009, it looks strongly like vaporware now.

Andrew 65% = -15

Eric 55% = -5

Graham 55% = -5

Shawn 35% = +15


Medal of Honor to sell more copies than Call of Duty: Black Ops in 2010

Despite Medal of Honor’s respectable 5 million copies sold in 2010, Black Ops continued the series’ strong showing by selling more than 13 million units.

Andrew 5% = +45

Graham 1% = +49

Shawn 10% = +40


PlayStation Phone to be confirmed by Sony in 2010

Despite early reports in September and October that appeared to leak photos and specs on a rumored PlayStation Phone, Sony has continued to remain mute on the issue of what it is, and whether it is even planned for release or simply a prototype design.

Andrew 65% = -15

Graham 85% = -35

Shawn 95% = -45

 

Xbox 360 or PS3 to surpass Wii in total U.S. sales in 2011

Ever since its launch, the Wii has outsold every competitor in the US, other than the DS. However, it has recently shown signs of weakening its stranglehold on sales, as the Xbox 360 and PS3 outsold it for a few months in 2010. Can the Wii bounce back in 2011? Or has the time come for a new champion of console sales in the US?

Gerry: As much as I want to say that this’ll be true, the fact of the matter is that the Wii is still the popular options when it comes to cheap family gifts. The odds of shovelware being sold on the Wii is much more likely than core titles on other systems, so even if Nintendo doesn’t present a particularly vast and numerous amount of first-party entries, the sales on those and third-party shovelware will more than likely keep the Wii ahead in sales. 10%

Andrew: I very much doubt that the PS3 will ever outsell the Wii, but I think the Xbox 360 has a pretty good shot at doing just that. 360 has continued to sell better than the Wii the last few months of 2010 and Wii sales have continued to decline, so it’s definitely a possibility. With the 3DS coming out this year, I doubt we’ll see any increase in Wii sales or any big releases for the system in the first part of 2011, so it could be Microsoft’s chance to take over. But at the same time, the Wii still sales fairly consistently from month to month, so it may not happen at all.65%

Graham: Sure, the 360 and PS3 gained on the Wii last year, but they did it with price cuts and new peripherals. The peripheral thing is done, and another price cut would have them practically giving away the systems. It’ll be competitive, but I can’t see anything particularly disruptive happening.  40%


Shawn: Considering the relative lack of software for the Wii, mixed with its lower sales of 2010, I’d say there’s a fairly strong possibility of the Xbox 360 outselling it in 2011. The PlayStation 3? Not so much. 80%

 


‘PSP2’ to release in 2011

While itself still a rumor, there’s growing speculation that this unconfirmed follow-up to the PSP will in fact be released during the holiday season of 2011. If this proves to be true, it will mark Sony as the first handheld creator to be successful enough against Nintendo to release a second system.

Gerry: There’s still quite a few titles that seem to be planned for the PSP, but a PSP2 being released this year isn’t unlikely. We’ve already seen things that look like prototypes for the handheld, and Sony doesn’t really have a good track record with keeping things secret. 90%


Andrew: I don’t know if the rumored PSP Phone and the PSP2 are related at all, but I could definitely see Sony releasing a new handheld this year to go against the 3DS. While nobody believes it’ll outsell Nintendo’s next handheld, I’m sure Sony wants something new on the market, whatever it ends up being.  75%

Graham: If there’s a system that could most justify a successor now, it’s the PSP. The home consoles seem to have enough legs for another year, and the 3DS takes away the PSP’s advantages in the marketplace. If there isn’t another PSP this year, there may not ever be another PSP.  80%

Shawn: I think that Sony will release a follow-up to the PSP at some point. Will it be this year though? I doubt it. The PSP seems to finally be hitting its stride in terms of game releases, so I’d actually think it has another year or so left in it, if Sony continues pushing production on it. 30%


‘Wii 2’ to release in 2011

2010 had the feel of a ‘kitchen sink’ year for the Wii. Nearly every major franchise Nintendo has access to had a new game released for it. Due to its recently flagging sales, and the sudden lack of any major franchises in development for the Wii, will Nintendo be the first to move on to the next generation of consoles this holiday season?

Gerry: 2011 sounds a little too soon for a “Wii2” launch, especially during the year of the 3DS launch. If anything, I’d find it more believable for it to be launched in 2012, after being announced at some major press event. So while I do know it’s going to come eventually, it and the 3DS being released seems like too much, too soon. 15%

Andrew: I think we might hear about a new Wii this year, but I doubt we’ll see it released, especially with Nintendo focusing solely on the launch of the 3DS. It’ll be interesting to see what they do at E3, but even if they do unveil it, I doubt it’ll be coming out this year. 25%


Graham: The 3DS is the type of juggernaut that will drive the year. That said, it’s not unprecedented for the company to release two systems in one year. A new home console to complement a new handheld can make for an interesting package to market. That said, I’m leaning toward a possible system announcement later in the year and a late 2012 release, since E3 2011 is going to be too busy for Nintendo as it is.  20%

Shawn: I know Nintendo has stuck fast to their insistence that they aren’t working on a new console, but the Wii has really started to show its age recently, and it has always been assumed that the Wii would be replaced by a new system earlier than the 360 or PS3. This year though? I think they may ride out one last holiday season and replace in it spring 2012. 40%

One of Snackbar Games’ traditions is to have staffers pick their top ten games of the year. We’re so all over the map in our tastes that our lists are never similar. Today, news editor Shawn Vermette shares some offbeat selections.

Honorable Mention: Recettear: An Item Shop’s Tale (PC). Recettear is a little indie title that was localized from Japan earlier this year. Part dungeon crawler, part item shop sim, this game was all addictive. Neither the dungeon crawling nor the item shop management were particularly hard or deep, but the milestones in sales you need to hit to continue in the game make it challenging. In the end, though, this game is totally worth playing for any fan of Japanese games.

10. Ace Attorney Investigations: Miles Edgeworth (DS). While different from the other Ace Attorney games, it retained the series’ trademark outrageous cases and writing. If it had included some courtroom drama in addition to the field work, it would have ranked higher on my list, as the Ace Attorney games are some of my favorite DS games to date.

9. Pokemon HeartGold/SoulSilver (DS). Yes, this was a remake. Yes, it didn’t have any new pokemon that would engender a new case of ‘gotta-catch-em-all’ fever. However, these were superb remakes of my favorite Pokemon games of the Game Boy/Game Boy Advance era and definitely reignited my passion for Pokemon games. READ MORE

When the Wii first launched, there was only one third-party game series that was worth purchasing: Rayman Raving Rabbids. Since then, the Rabbids dumped Rayman and are now gallivanting around in their own series of games, with Travel in Time being the latest. Unfortunately, it is also the worst of the series. 

The barebones storyline in Travel in Time is as follows: the Rabbids have somehow turned a washing machine into a time machine, and, by traveling haphazardly through time, are responsible for a bunch of the crazy things in our past such as the Sphinx’s missing nose, the creation of fire, and Arthur pulling out Excalibur. This story serves one purpose, and one purpose only: to give you an excuse to play 20 minigames in all periods of history, from prehistory up until 2012 AD.

After the opening cutscene, which is funny and worthy of the series, you’ll begin playing in a museum in the year 2012. You then have to find your way, with little in the way of instructions, to the various areas the minigames are hidden in. It has a few hidden easter eggs throughout the museum that are fun to search for and work on at first, but it quickly becomes obvious that the museum is simply an overly extravagant menu, and one that gets in the way of the fun, rather than enhancing it. 

The minigames have always been the highlight of the Raving Rabbids games, and the Rabbids are just as crazy as ever. Unfortunately, the minigames just don’t have the same charm this time. There are 5 different types of minigames, each in their own hall of the museum, not counting the dancing and Rock Band-style games. There’s the bouncearium, which includes a number of side-scrolling minigames, the shootarium, which involves a number of shooting minigames, the flyarium, which has flying minigames, the runarium, which has a bunch of racing minigames, and the hookarium, which has a few motion plus minigames. None of them, though, bring the fun and craziness that they have in past installments of the series. Sure, the cutscenes are funny and appropriately off-the-wall, but if the games aren’t fun, there’s just no way to salvage the title.

The graphics and sound are as good as any other Rabbids game, but a minigame collection lives or dies on its minigames, and unfortunately, this one dies on them.

If you’re interested in a minigame collection with a crazy and somewhat demented sense of humor, go with the original Rayman Raving Rabbids or Rayman Raving Rabbids TV Party, as they are vastly superior in almost every way.

Pros: Cutscenes are entertaining; Fun for a short while

Cons: Minigames aren’t that fun, even with 4 players; Museum gets in the way of the game, rather than enhancing it

The latest patch for Civilization V went live today, and boy is it a big one. Owners of the turn-based strategy game should be sure to check out the patch notes, shown after the break, for a full list of changes, as nearly everything in the game is touched on by at least one change. The biggest changes? The diplomacy system is being made much more transparent, and more strategic, and the tactical AI receives a long list of changes being made to improve its ability to compete with humans. READ MORE

The Humble Indie Bundle is back this holiday season with 5 new indie games that should appeal to fans of almost any type of game. The Humble Indie Bundle allows you to choose how much you wish to pay for 5 indie games. You can choose to pay as little as a single penny, if you so desire. However, you may want to consider paying more than that, since the proceeds also benefit the Child’s Play and Electronic Frontier Foundation charities. READ MORE